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but from the looks of it they spend quite a bit of time on subjects i feel i have a pretty good grasp on.This actually tells me how little you know. I have a scant 10 years roasting and barista experience, 3 years professionally running my own Roastery Cafe (now two locations with a possible third on the near horizon) Yet if I had the time and money I would benefit from ABC. Oh, I have attended numerous Barista competitions, including Regional Level barista competition judging, hosted 6 home roaster/home barista gathering/jams with as many as a dozen espresso machines in my house, hosted professional barista latte throwdown, pulled thousands of shots for very satisfied customers , roasted many tons of coffee etc.
Education is great for the sake of education. Education is not necessarily great for finding your calling. That said many MANY MANY MANY businesses fail not from not knowing the technical aspects or having a passion, but from lack of knowing how to run a business. Statistically 50% fail in the first 5 years. Half. Of the remaining 50% that started 80% of those fail in the next 5 years. That leaves 10% still going 10 years in. Now there are other studies not quite as bleak yet most seem to trend the same. Bottom line knowing your product definitely ain't necessarily enough.
From your BIO it appears you have no professional experience but have about a year and a half experience as a home roaster and home barista. Yet you say after researching ABC
but from the looks of it they spend quite a bit of time on subjects i feel i have a pretty good grasp on.This actually tells me how little you know. I have a scant 10 years roasting and barista experience, 3 years professionally running my own Roastery Cafe (now two locations with a possible third on the near horizon) Yet if I had the time and money I would benefit from ABC. Oh, I have attended numerous Barista competitions, including Regional Level barista competition judging, hosted 6 home roaster/home barista gathering/jams with as many as a dozen espresso machines in my house, hosted professional barista latte throwdown, pulled thousands of shots for very satisfied customers , roasted many tons of coffee etc.
And I KNOW the more I know the more I know I don't know.
Get a job in a quality shop and get a solid business education foundation. Attend as many coffee related seminars, trade shows, competitions etc. as you can. In a few years when you may then be ready to open your own shop you'll be glad you did. Is a degree necessarily beneficial? I don't think so. But good business education sure as hell would be.
ha yeah... Im going through the same thing. let me know what you decide and why. Although I'd look into ABC before going there. I dont know first hand but I have heard that If you already have a pretty extensive knowledge of coffee you might be better off looking into classes offered by BGA. Thats just what I've heard though
THANK YOU EVERYONE! This really thread is getting me excited about school next year! This is just the reassurance I needed. I really enjoy education, and do think it would make me a better person overall, i was just worried about cost, and you all have assured me that you CAN do both! (pay for starting a business and going to school)
Next year i'm going to go all out, and take classes that interest me (physics, philosophy, business) and view it as an experience to make myself a more rounded person, rather than a means to get a degree.
I am staying in the area and will be able to keep my connections with local businesses, and will continue my coffee education in my free time. I will keep you all posted as to how things are going. I really appreciate the advice.
You guys are actually really helping me out in life, so...Thank you. BX is awesome.
Hey Alex, I actually worked for free for an entire summer at a coffee shop between my junior and senior year at college. I proposed to them that in exchange for my services, that they would teach me what they knew. So, every day, for four to five hours a day I would sweep, dust plants, clean the toilet, stock shelves, eventually taking orders and eventually making drinks. This does not work for everyone, primarily because if you truly want to own a business you must learn to work for free. Of course, in college we privy ourselves to the idea that we are worth this for that amount of time, and not getting paid for your work is very foreign. This is why so many people fail, because they don't have the fortitude or have delayed gratification in order to pull it off. I would say keep going to school, get your degree (if nothing else, so that you're socially acceptable, because that's all it is anyways for the most part), and maybe consider working for free. Again, not for everyone, people like to complain and whine about not getting paid, but what you invest in, whether education or experience, will lead to more riches later on. -Scott
Alex Stoffregen said:THANK YOU EVERYONE! This really thread is getting me excited about school next year! This is just the reassurance I needed. I really enjoy education, and do think it would make me a better person overall, i was just worried about cost, and you all have assured me that you CAN do both! (pay for starting a business and going to school)
Next year i'm going to go all out, and take classes that interest me (physics, philosophy, business) and view it as an experience to make myself a more rounded person, rather than a means to get a degree.
I am staying in the area and will be able to keep my connections with local businesses, and will continue my coffee education in my free time. I will keep you all posted as to how things are going. I really appreciate the advice.
You guys are actually really helping me out in life, so...Thank you. BX is awesome.
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